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From M.A. Bozarth (1990). Drug
addiction as a psychobiological process. In D.M. Warburton
(Ed.), Addiction controversies (pp. 112-134 + refs). London:
Harwood
Academic Publishers.
Drug Addiction as a
Psychobiological Process
Michael A. Bozarth
Department of Psychology
State University of New York at Buffalo
Buffalo, New York 14260 U.S.A.
This chapter addresses the etiology of drug addiction. The
emphasis is on biological mechanisms underlying addiction,
although some other factors influencing drug addiction will also
be discussed. The presentation is limited primarily to
psychomotor stimulants (e.g., amphetamine, cocaine) and opiates
(e.g., heroin, morphine) for two reasons. First, considerable
knowledge has been gained during the past 15 years regarding the
neurobiological mechanisms mediating their addictive properties.
Second, these two pharmacological classes represent the best
examples of potent addictive drugs, and the elucidation of their
addiction potential can provide a framework for understanding
abuse and addiction to other psychotropic agents.
Some psychologists and sociologists assert that animal studies
do not model the important psychological variables governing
drug addiction. They suggest that psychological processes
critical in the etiology of addiction cannot be studied in
animal models and/or that environmental influences important in
producing an addiction cannot be duplicated in animal studies.
This position is generally untenable, and animal models have
been developed that accurately represent the primary processes
involved in drug addiction. Support for the validity of these
animal models will emanate from an understanding of the
characteristics and the neural basis of drug addiction
summarized in the following sections.
The arguments presented in the chapter are tenable, but they
represent only one of several perspectives used in studying
addiction. The terminology and even some aspects of the
empirical data are the topics of scientific debate. The
objective of this chapter is not to provide a balanced
presentation of controversial issues, but rather to develop a
unifying framework for understanding the psychobiological basis
of addiction.
Concept of Addiction
Before proceeding with an examination of the mechanisms
underlying drug addiction, it is necessary to define the term
addiction and to examine the main characteristics of drug
addiction. Delineation of the salient attributes of addiction
helps to establish the criteria that must be fulfilled in a
valid animal model and helps to determine what biological
processes are relevant to the etiology of addiction.
Issue of Terminology
Drug addiction refers to a situation where drug procurement and
administration appear to govern the organism’s behavior, and
where the drug seems to dominate the organism’s motivational
hierarchy. Jaffe (1975) has described addiction as "a
behavioral pattern of compulsive drug use, characterized by
overwhelming involvement with the use of a drug, the securing of
its supply, and a high tendency to relapse after withdrawal
[abstinence] (p. 285)." This definition follows the general
lexical usage of the term and is consistent with the word’s
etymology (see Bozarth 1987a).Drug addiction is defined
behaviorally. It carries no connotations regarding the drug’s
potential adverse effects, the social acceptability of drug
usage, or the physiological consequences of chronic drug
administration (Jaffe 1975). This latter point is especially
important because some investigators have mistakenly used the
term addiction to describe the development of physical
dependence (see Bozarth 1987a, 1989; Jaffe 1975). Although drug
addiction frequently has adverse medical consequences, it is
usually associated with strong social disapproval, and it is
sometimes accompanied by the development of physical dependence,
these factors do not define addiction nor are they invariably
associated with it. Drug addiction is an extreme case of
compulsive drug use associated with strong motivational effects
of the drug. Nature of Addiction
Initial drug use can be motivated by a number of factors.
Curiosity about the drug’s effects, peer pressure, or
psychodynamic processes can all provide sufficient motivation
for experimental or circumstantial drug use. If the drug is
taken repeatedly, a period of casual drug use often develops.
Further use of the drug associated with more frequent drug
administration, the use of higher drug dosages, and/or the use
of more effective routes of administration (e.g., switching from
intranasal to intravenous cocaine use) can lead to intensive
patterns of drug use. Continued, more sustained drug use can
then produce compulsive drug use where the substance has strong
motivational properties and appears to govern much of the
individual’s behavior. The most extreme case of drug use is
the final progression to addiction. Drug use is viewed as a
continuum, progressing from casual use to addiction (see Jaffe
1975); the drug assumes increasing control of the individual’s
behavior as the pattern of drug use approaches addiction. Jaffe
(1975) suggests that addiction is an extreme case of drug use
that is not qualitatively different, but rather quantitatively
different, from compulsive drug use. The failure to clearly
distinguish between compulsive drug use and addiction appears to
produce ambiguity and suggests a weakness in Jaffe’s (1975)
definitions of these terms. Further consideration, however,
reveals that an important inference can be made regarding the
nature of addiction.
With this view—drug addiction representing the extreme point
on a continuum progressing from casual drug use—drug addiction
does not represent a special situation, but rather an extreme
case of behavioral control. The only change is in the drug’s
motivational strength and its disruption of the individual’s
normal motivational hierarchy. (This latter effect has been
termed motivational toxicity. See Wise and Bozarth 1985, for a
discussion; see also Bozarth 1989 and Johanson et al. 1987).
This represents a quantitative increase in the control of the
individual’s behavior and not a qualitative shift in that
behavior. With this perspective, addiction is an exaggerated
form of normal behavior, similar to other types of
psychopathology that represent extreme forms of exaggerated
(compulsive) behavior. The distinguishing feature is the extreme
motivational strength involving otherwise normal behavioral
mechanisms. Therefore, it is a fundamental mistake to assume
that addiction is a special case of behavioral control.
Acquisition and Maintenance Phases
Drug addiction is frequently divided into two
phases—acquisition and maintenance. This conceptual partition
acknowledges that different factors may be involved in these two
phases and that different degrees of drug-taking behavior are
associated with these phases. The progression from the
acquisition phase to the maintenance phase of addiction is not a
quantal change, but rather it represents a shift in the
importance of various factors that control the organism’s
behavior along with an increase in the motivational strength of
the drug-taking behavior. A brief example illustrates the
utility of considering addiction as a two stage process.Prior to
the first experience with a drug, the direct rewarding effects
of drug administration are largely irrelevant in governing the
individual’s behavior, except of course in that expectancies
are developed from social interactions (e.g., media exposure,
conversations with experienced users). Initiation of drug-taking
behavior is governed by intrapersonal and sociological variables
such as curiosity about the drug’s effects or peer pressure to
try the drug. After initial exposure to the drug,
pharmacological variables are relevant and will influence
subsequent drug-taking behavior. Intrapersonal and sociological
factors are probably still important in determining continued
drug use, but they are less significant as the potent rewarding
effects are repeatedly experienced. At some point there is a
shift in control from intrapersonal/sociological to
pharmacological factors in governing drug-taking behavior. This
is concomitant with a marked increase in the motivational
strength of the drug and with a progression from casual to
compulsive drug use and ultimately to drug addiction. This may
occur very rapidly for some drugs such as heroin or free-base
cocaine and much more slowly for other drugs such as alcohol.
The division of addiction into two separate phases does not
presume that different mechanisms are involved in each phase.
Rather, the demarcation acknowledges the possibility of
different mechanisms but more importantly emphasizes differences
in the motivational strength between the acquisition and
maintenance of addictive behavior. As will be described later in
the chapter, the same psychobiological process underlies both
phases but additional variables are important in the acquisition
of addiction. These other variables lose much of their influence
as the addiction fully develops and as it becomes increasingly
under control of basic pharmacological mechanisms.
Individual vs. Unitary Theories
A primary issue in considering the etiology of drug addiction is
whether addiction to various drugs represents different
processes, each specific to a particular drug type (i.e.,
individual theories), or whether some general mechanism
underlies addiction to different pharmacological classes of
drugs (i.e., unitary theory). A more extreme variation of the
multiple theory approach might assert that the cause of
addiction to even a single drug varies with each individual,
thus necessitating unique theories for every case of addiction.
In this latter situation, the causal elements in addiction would
emanate primarily from psychodynamic processes, and the
addiction would be viewed as nothing more than a specific
instance of psychopathology. Treatment approaches used for other
types of psychopathology would be appropriate, and no
specialized procedures for treating addiction qua addiction
would be necessary. This position has not gained popularity nor
is it tenable as evidenced by the general failure of
psychoanalytical and traditional psychotherapeutic methods to
effectively treat drug addiction.
The possibility that addiction to different drugs involves a
common mechanism has attracted many investigators, although most
researchers confine their work to a single drug class. Attempts
to identify underlying mechanisms common to various drug
addictions do not presume that addictions to all classes of
drugs are identical; there are obvious differences among
addictions to different drugs, and even individual cases
involving the same drug can display marked differences. However,
certain elements of addiction seem to be shared across
distinctively different pharmacological classes, and these
similarities provide the impetus for developing unifying
theories of addiction.
The unifying theory orientation suggests a somewhat different
approach to studying addiction than does the individual theories
orientation. First, drugs that produce the strongest addiction
might be studied initially—the best examples of drug addiction
should provide the best vehicle for identifying the underlying
mechanisms. Drugs with weaker addictive properties would be
examined after the relevant psychobiological processes have been
delineated for drugs producing a rapid and profound addiction.
Second, the commonalties among these addictive drugs should be
identified and examined, and the differences should be presumed
initially to have little importance in determining their
addictive properties. The fact that one drug class produces
signs of general behavioral stimulation and another drug class
produces general behavioral sedation might be attributed to
"side effects" of these drugs and not deemed important
in understanding their addictive properties. Third, individual
theories of addiction would be developed for different drugs
only as conclusive evidence showed that the more general theory
was not adequate. This principle of parsimony has been useful in
resolving other, seemingly complicated phenomena into simpler
conceptualizations. Animal Models
Several animal models of human drug addiction have been studied.
Some involve the interaction of addictive drugs with electrical
activation of brain reward pathways, while others have studied
the various behavioral and physiological effects of drugs (see
Bozarth 1987ab). The most popular methods have focused on the
ability of drugs to directly control the animal’s behavior.
This approach is consistent with the behavioral definition of
addiction, and it has the strongest face validity of any animal
model used to study human drug addiction. Using traditional
operant psychology techniques, laboratory animals can be trained
to self-administer many psychotropic drugs. Although animals
will self-administer drugs by various routes of administration
(e.g., oral, intragastric, intracranial), the intravenous
self-administration method has gained the most widespread
acceptance. Animals are surgically prepared with intravenous
catheters and are tested for voluntary drug self-administration
using traditional operant techniques (see Yokel 1987).
Typically, the subjects are tested in an operant chamber
containing a lever; depressing the lever automatically delivers
drug through an intravenous catheter. Experimental procedures
have been developed that permit testing of unrestrained, freely
moving subjects. With this technique, normal animal behavior
(e.g., grooming, feeding and drinking) can be studied
concurrently with intravenous drug self-administration.
Addictive drugs control behavior in a manner similar to
conventional reinforcers (e.g., food and water) when drug
administration is made contingent upon lever pressing (Johanson
1978; Spealman and Goldberg 1979; see also Fischman and Schuster
1978). Most drugs that are addictive in humans are readily
self-administered by laboratory animals, and drugs that are not
addictive in humans are generally not self-administered by
animals (Deneau et al. 1969; Griffiths and Balster 1979;
Griffiths et al. 1979a; Weeks and Collins 1987; Yokel 1987).
Procedures used to study intravenous drug self-administration in
laboratory animals have also been applied to studying drug
self-administration in humans (see Henningfield et al. 1987;
Mello and Mendelson 1987).
Approximately 80% of the animals tested for intravenous cocaine
or heroin self-administration learn to self-administer drug
under standard laboratory conditions (see Bozarth 1989). No
special training procedures or pre-existing conditions (e.g.,
food deprivation) are necessary for these drugs to serve as
rewards in this experimental paradigm. If operant shaping
techniques are used, this number approaches 100%. Some animals
learn within several hours of exposure to the testing procedure,
while others may require two or three weeks of exposure for
several hours each day before reliable patterns of drug
self-administration emerge. Animals tested under limited access
conditions (viz., no limitations on the amount of drug
administered per hour, but subjects can only self-administer
drug for a limited number of hours each day, e.g., 2 to 12 hours
daily) maintain good general health and show little or no
disruption of food and water intake. Limited access testing is
the procedure used most often in intravenous self-administration
studies, and it is associated with low subject morbidity and
attrition. Testing cocaine under unlimited access conditions
(i.e., continuous testing 24 hours per day) is accompanied by an
extremely high subject mortality (90% subject loss within 30
days; Bozarth and Wise 1985), and it produces a rapid
deterioration in the animal’s health. For this reason, the
unlimited access procedure has been used very infrequently, and
all further discussion of this method will be restricted to
limited access conditions. Animals tested for intravenous
psychomotor stimulant or opiate self-administration quickly
develop stable patterns of drug intake, where the average hourly
drug intake is consistent both within and between experimental
sessions. The effect of changing the amount of drug administered
with each injection (i.e., unit dose) is predictable, and the
substitution of saline for reinforcing drug produces a rapid
extinction of lever-pressing behavior. The intravenous
self-administration procedure has been used extensively to study
the behavior maintained by drugs serving as reinforcers and to
study the neural basis of drug reward.
Neural Basis of Drug Reward
The majority of research investigating the neural mechanisms of
motivation and reward has been conducted using laboratory
animals. Although most scientists see no difficulty in
generalizing from these studies to human neurobiology, brief
mention of the applicability of these data is warranted. First
and foremost is the recognition that there are obvious
anatomical and physiological differences, but the primary
difference between laboratory rats (the most commonly used
species) and phylogenetically higher mammals is in cortical
development. These higher brain centers are involved primarily
in cognitive processes such as learning and memory, in speech,
and in fine motor control. The basic motivational substrates
across mammalian species are probably very similar. The limited
neurophysiological and pharmacological investigations that have
been conducted in humans seem to confirm this notion of similar
brain reward pathways (e.g., Heath 1964). Second is the
acknowledgement that motivational differences do exist, but that
the most important difference between human and infrahuman
animals probably involves cognitive influences on these
motivational mechanisms. These influences cannot be fully
studied in animal models, but they probably exert their primary
influence on initial drug-taking behavior and have much less
influence once intensive patterns of drug taking have developed.
Brain dopamine systems have been the focus of considerable
attention in behavioral neurobiology. In particular, the ventral
tegmental dopamine system appears to have an important role in
motivated behavior (see Bozarth 1987c) and in some types of
psychopathology. This dopamine system has its cell bodies
located in the ventral tegmental area and sends its axonal
projections to several brain regions (see Lindvall and Bjorklund
1974; Ungerstedt 1971a), most notably the nucleus accumbens (see
Figure 2). It receives neural inputs from many diverse brain
sites and modulates neural activity in cortical and limbic
areas.
Psychomotor Stimulant Reward
The component of neural transmission generally most sensitive to
pharmacological manipulations is synaptic activity.
Neurotransmitters are released following the arrival of an
action potential at the presynaptic terminal and rapidly diffuse
across the synaptic cleft to postsynaptic target cells. Once
bound to their receptors, they can either facilitate or inhibit
neural activity in these target neurons. Psychomotor stimulants
strongly affect catecholaminergic synaptic transmission (viz.,
neurons releasing dopamine or norepinephrine). Cocaine blocks
the inactivation of dopamine by inhibiting its presynaptic
reuptake (Heikkila et al. 1975) thereby increasing the effect of
synaptically released dopamine; amphetamine blocks dopamine
reuptake and also inhibits its degradation by monoamine oxidase
(Axelrod 1970; Carlsson 1970). Both actions produce a potent
enhancement of dopaminergic neurotransmission. Other
neurotransmitter systems are also affected by psychomotor
stimulants (e.g., noradrenergic, serotonergic), but several
studies have shown that enhancement of dopaminergic
neurotransmission is critically involved in the rewarding action
of these drugs.
Neuroleptic drugs—which block dopamine receptors—disrupt the
intravenous self-administration of psychomotor stimulants, while
drugs blocking noradrenergic receptors are ineffective (de Wit
and Wise 1977; Yokel and Wise 1975, 1976; see also Yokel 1987).
Lesions of the dopaminergic terminal field in the nucleus
accumbens attenuate psychomotor stimulant self-administration (Lyness
et al. 1979; Roberts et al. 1977, 1980; see also Roberts and
Zito 1987), as do lesions of the dopamine-containing cell bodies
in the ventral tegmental area (Roberts and Koob, 1982). These
studies have used a selective neurotoxin that destroys only
dopamine neurons and has no appreciable effect on the other
neurons found in those areas. Self-administration procedures
have been adapted so that animals can self-administer drug
directly into restricted brain areas (see Bozarth 1983, 1987d).
Studies using this intracranial self-administration technique
have shown that amphetamine (Hoebel et al. 1983) or dopamine (Dworkin
et al. 1986) injections administered directly into the nucleus
accumbens are rewarding. These lines of evidence have firmly
established a role of the ventral tegmental dopamine system in
psychomotor stimulant reward.Opiate Reward
Opiates do not appear to affect dopaminergic synaptic activity
directly but do stimulate dopamine neurons by an action at the
cell body region in the ventral tegmentum. Following opiate
administration the neural activity of these dopamine neurons is
increased (Gysling and Wang 1983; Matthews and German 1984).
Action potentials generated at the cell body region are
conducted along the axon to the synaptic terminals in the
nucleus accumbens (see Figure 2). There they produce an
impulse-coupled release of dopamine. The increased cell firing
rates in the ventral tegmentum lead to an increased dopamine
release in the nucleus accumbens (Di Chiara and Imperato 1988;
Westerink 1978; Wood 1983). Both the action of opiates in the
cell body region (enhancing dopamine cell firing rates) and the
action of psychomotor stimulants in the terminal region
(enhancing dopaminergic synaptic activity) produce a net
increase in dopaminergic neurotransmission in the nucleus
accumbens. Different neural elements are involved, but an
important neural action is shared by both classes of drugs.
Dopamine-depleting lesions of the ventral tegmental area disrupt
the acquisition of intravenous heroin self-administration (Bozarth
and Wise 1986). The effects of neuroleptics on opiate
self-administration have been difficult to interpret (see
Bozarth 1986; Wise 1987; cf. Ettenberg et al. 1982), but
conditioning studies have shown that neuroleptics block opiate
reward (Bozarth and Wise 1981a; Phillips et al. 1982). Animals
will readily self-administer opiates directly into the ventral
tegmental area (Bozarth and Wise 1981b; Van Ree and De Wied
1980), and the rewarding action of these injections has been
confirmed using other behavior techniques (Bozarth and Wise
1982; Phillips and LePiane 1980). The anatomical zone where
morphine infusions are rewarding corresponds closely to the
location of the dopamine-containing cell bodies in the ventral
tegmental area (see Bozarth 1987e). Infusions of morphine
directly into the ventral tegmentum do not produce physical
dependence, while morphine infusions into another brain site
that does produce physical dependence (i.e., the periaqueductal
gray region; see Figure 2) are not rewarding (Bozarth and Wise
1984). This neuroanatomical dissociation of reward and physical
dependence shows that opiates can be rewarding without the
development of physical dependence.
The interpretation of research identifying the neural basis of
opiate reward has been somewhat controversial, but considerable
data suggest that opiates can activate the same brain reward
system as that mediating reward from psychomotor stimulants.
Direct support for this hypothesis comes from a study showing
that ventral tegmental morphine injections can partially
substitute for intravenous cocaine injections (Bozarth and Wise
1986). This would be expected if the same brain reward system is
critically involved in the rewarding actions of these two
classes of drugs. In addition, chronic opiate administration may
evoke other reward processes that are not shared with
psychomotor stimulants, but these processes are not important in
the initial rewarding action of opiates.
Other Rewards
Other drugs may activate the ventral tegmental dopamine system;
alcohol and nicotine have been shown to increase dopamine
release in the nucleus accumbens (Di Chiara and Imperato 1988).
The importance of this effect for the rewarding actions of these
compounds has not been systematically evaluated, but it seems
likely that at least part of their rewarding properties may
evolve from an action on this reward system. Furthermore, the
rewarding effect of electrical brain stimulation (at least from
some electrode sites) appears to involve dopaminergic
neurotransmission (Fibiger 1978; Fibiger and Phillips 1979; Wise
1978; see also Bozarth 1987c), and the regulation of food and
water intake has an important dopaminergic component (see
Ungerstedt 1971b; Wise 1982). These data suggest that brain
dopamine systems—in particular the ventral tegmental dopamine
system—may provide a general motivational function, and this
hypothesis is consistent with the notion that addictive drugs
derive their rewarding effects by pharmacologically activating
brain reward systems involved in governing normal behavior. (See
Bozarth 1986, 1987c; Wise and Bozarth 1984, 1987. For earlier
discussions of the interaction of addictive drugs with brain
reward systems, see Broekkamp 1976; Esposito and Kornetsky 1978;
Kornetsky et al. 1979; Reid and Bozarth 1978).Pre-eminent Role
of Animal Studies
There are numerous findings from animal studies that have
important implications for understanding human drug addiction.
Some of these findings contradict commonly held notions about
drug addiction and others resolve issues where clinical research
has been indecisive. Animal research in several important areas
can help direct future clinical research and can prompt a
reinterpretation of some clinical studies. This is the converse
of the usual situation where animal studies are considered
inadequate if they fail to meet expectations generated by
clinical studies. Animal studies have the advantages (i) of not
being limited by the ethical constraints imposed on human
clinical research and (ii) of having a subject population where
the important variables can be adequately controlled. Four
examples will be used to illustrate the pre-eminence of animal
research.
First, animal studies have clearly shown that pre-existing
conditions are not necessary for drugs to be rewarding.
Psychopathology, stress, and other intrapersonal conditions may
influence drug-taking behavior, but animal research has shown
that none of these factors are necessary conditions for a drug
to exert its potent ability to control behavior. Sociological
variables (e.g., deviant or rebellious behavior, peer pressure,
modeling) may also influence drug-taking behavior but are
obviously not essential for drugs to serve as reinforcers. Mere
exposure to the drug is sufficient to motivate subsequent
drug-taking behavior.
Second, the self-administration of addictive drugs by laboratory
animals supports the notion that drugs act as universal
reinforcers. Human-specific attributes are not necessary for
drug reinforcement to occur. The factors governing drug-taking
behavior are not unique to humans; they involve biobehavioral
processes shared across mammalian species. Indeed, drug
addiction might be considered a phylogenetically primitive
behavior. The brain systems mediating the addictive properties
of drugs evolved early and have a central role in promoting
survival of the organism.
Third, neural mechanisms involved in opiate and psychomotor
stimulant reward have been identified. An important component of
reward from these drugs involves the activation of a common
neural substrate, although additional brain systems may also be
involved. This suggests a commonalty between these distinctively
different pharmacological classes. This shared action on a brain
reward system has long been obscured in animal and human studies
noting the marked differences in the general effects produced by
these drugs. Identification of the brain mechanisms underlying
the rewarding actions of these drugs has relegated the prominent
differences to the status of "side effects." Just as
the cardiovascular effects of psychomotor stimulants are
unlikely contributors to their addictive properties, the
analgesic effects of opiates are probably not important in
controlling opiate addiction. (Physical dependence and
withdrawal from chronic opiate administration remains an
unsubstantiated, but potentially significant, factor in
long-term opiate addiction; see Bozarth 1988; Bozarth and Wise
1983.) Human subjects exposed to the complex stimulus properties
produced by drug administration are likely to attend to and
report the most salient interoceptive cues. Many of these cues,
frequently related to general central nervous system stimulation
or depression, may overshadow and mask the similar subjective
states produced by various drugs unless adequate
subjective-effects measures are used. Some early investigators
recognized the importance of subjective effects such as mood
elevation and euphoria (Eddy 1973; Eddy et al. 1957; McAuliffe
and Gordon 1974), but most seem to have been preoccupied with
the drugs’ general central nervous system effects which can
differ markedly for various classes of addictive drugs. The
Addiction Research Center Inventory, an empirically derived test
designed to measure the subjective effects of addictive drugs,
detects the mood-elevating effects of psychomotor stimulants and
opiates on the same scale (see Haertzen and Hickey 1987). On the
other hand, the subjective-effects of these two drug classes can
be easily distinguished. This is not surprising considering that
ex-addicts report a preference for heroin over morphine (Martin
and Fraser 1961), even though heroin is rapidly converted to
morphine after entering the brain (Jaffe and Martin 1975). This
drug preference is probably related to pharmacokinetic
differences in these two compounds which may produce differences
in their interoceptive cues. Fourth, clinical research often
suffers from strong subject biases. Response-demand
characteristics can have a large influence on the subject’s
responses, not only affecting the intensity but also the
direction of responses. The power of these demand
characteristics is perhaps best illustrated by hypnotic
phenomenon, where seemingly supranormal behaviors can be
elicited (e.g., Barber 1972) and where the subject’s
uncertainty about events can be supplanted with absolute
confidence (e.g., Laurence and Perry 1983; Perry and Laurence
1983). The subject’s behavior may also be influenced by the
consequences of his responses. Consider, for example, the
methadone maintenance patient who wishes to have his methadone
dose increased to experience mood elevation or euphoria. If the
patient tells the physician that he wishes to recapture the
pleasant subjective state produced by the opiate, the physician
is unlikely to prescribe an increased dosage. If, on the other
hand, the patient reports intense subjective discomfort related
to opiate withdrawal reactions, this may evoke an empathetic
increase in the methadone dosage. Similarly, expressions about
craving and desire for the drug are less likely to receive
favorable support from the physician than complaints about the
physical symptoms of withdrawal. Craving and desire are
"psychological" attributes and frequently viewed as
‘under the person’s control;’ withdrawal discomfort is
attributed to "physiological" processes that are not
directly controlled by the patient. Much like any physical
illness, physiological withdrawal reactions are considered
nonvolitional and therefore foreign to the individual’s
concept of ‘self.’ The response-demand characteristics of
this situation can evoke exaggerated emphasis on withdrawal
reactions and obscure the importance of other factors such as
drug craving. (It is important to note that a person may
mistakenly attribute his drug-taking behavior to these factors
even in the absence of significant situational demand
characteristics. This false attribution rationalizes the
individual’s tendency to consider the addiction nonvolitional,
‘out of his control.’ Recent clinical trends have shifted
toward the recognition of drug-induced alterations in desires
and their fundamental role in addiction.) Animal studies have
permitted an unmasking of important effects shared by different
classes of drugs and have provided much of the impetus for
developing unifying theories of addiction. These studies have a
seemingly pre-eminent role in directing research with humans,
refocusing attention on central issues in drug addiction and
suggesting a reinterpretation of some human studies. Dissonance
between animal and human studies probably indicates that the
human studies are influenced by additional factors. These
factors are most likely to be factors important in the etiology
of addiction that are not duplicated in animal studies or
factors related to subject/experimenter biases resulting from
inadequately designed clinical research. Inadequately designed
animal research could also produce dissonance, but this is less
likely because the relevant variables are more easily
controlled. The burden of scrutinizing the experimental design
and results falls most heavily on the clinical studies, and
animal studies have attained a pre-eminent role in delineating
addictive processes.
Relevance of Motivational Theory
The nature of drug addiction places its study firmly in the
realm of motivational psychology. Many of the experimental
methods that have been developed to study conventional rewards
(e.g., food, water, sex) can be applied to the study of
addiction, and the conceptual advances made in motivational
theory can be used to guide the study of addictive behavior. The
consideration of addiction as simply exaggerated/excessive
behavior (viz., a pathological manifestation of normal
behavioral processes) prompts fitting addiction into the
framework provided by general motivational theory.
Importance of Considering Motivational Strength
The defining feature of addiction is its potent control of
behavior—the motivation to obtain and self-administer the drug
is extremely strong. Several behavioral measures have been used
to determine motivational strength; the primary measures are
response latency, response frequency, and response vigor.
Although the first two measures have been used to quantify
motivational strength, response vigor measures are studied most
frequently in classic animal motivation studies (e.g., see
Bolles 1967, 1975; Hull 1943, 1951). Response vigor can be
subdivided into three general types of measures: resistance to
extinction, work output to obtain reward, and magnitude of
aversive stimuli necessary to suppress responding for the goal
object. All of these variables increase as a monotonic function
of motivational strength across a variety of conventional
rewards (see Bolles 1975).Techniques are available to study
these response vigor measures in animal models of addiction, but
they have not been routinely used. However, two specific
experimental methods have been used to measure the strength of
drug-taking behavior, and they will be briefly described here.
Both methods employ intravenous drug self-administration.
After drug self-administration has been established,
substitution of drug vehicle for the reinforcing drug produces
an extinction pattern similar to that produced by conventional
rewards such as food and water—there is an initial increase in
lever pressing followed by a cessation in responding.
Noncontingent, experimenter-delivered priming injections of the
drug can reinstate lever-pressing behavior on subsequent trials
even though the lever-pressing fails to produce injections of
the reinforcing drug. This technique may provide an animal model
of relapse and may be related to the human subjective experience
of craving. Indeed, the animal’s responding despite the
response-contingent delivery of rewarding drug may represent a
type of drug-seeking behavior. Priming with the rewarding drug
reinstates behavior previously reinforced by drug injections,
and this effect is conceptually related to the classic response
vigor measure of resistance to extinction. (See Stewart and de
Wit 1987, for a discussion of this method.)Another experimental
method that measures response vigor in animals trained to
self-administer drugs is a variation of traditional operant
methodology. Animals can be readily trained to lever press
several times for each drug injection. Once the behavioral
response is firmly established, the number of lever presses
required to produce a drug injection is progressively increased.
The number of times an animal will lever press for a single
reinforcing drug injection can be interpreted as reflecting the
work output for the drug. This provides a measure of the
drug’s motivational strength, and this technique has been
successfully used by several laboratories (e.g., see Brady et al
1987; Roberts et al. 1989; Yanagita 1987).Both of these
experimental procedures appear to measure the motivational
strength of the drug reward. Their face validity is high, and
increases in the amount of drug delivered during priming or
during self-administration produce increases in these measures.
Drugs addictive in humans (e.g., cocaine, heroin) have potent
motivational properties as demonstrated by these techniques.
Despite the availability of these and other potentially valuable
methods for determining the motivational strength of various
drugs, they have seldom been employed. This is unfortunate
because the case for addiction can only be established by
demonstrating the extremely strong motivational properties of
the drug that are inherent in the definition of addiction.
Nonetheless, there is an excellent correspondence between drugs
that are self-administered by laboratory animals and drugs that
are clinically judged to be addictive in humans. Despite this
concordance, however, it is erroneous to consider a drug
addictive just because it is self-administered by animals just
as it is erroneous to diagnose addiction on the simple
observation that a substance is taken by humans. To establish
that a drug is addictive, it is essential to show that the
substance has the strong motivational properties necessary to
produce the level of compulsive drug-taking behavior that
defines addiction. Simple demonstration of drug reward is
insufficient, because substances may activate brain mechanisms
involved in motivation and reward without activating them in a
manner that produces the extreme, exaggerated behavior termed
addiction.
An Incentive Motivational Model
There are two contrasting positions regarding basic motivational
mechanisms that will be considered. Drive-reduction theory
asserts that organisms are motivated by drives which ‘push’
the animal toward the goal object; the primary motivation is to
reduce the drive. Incentive motivational theory asserts that
organisms are motivated by incentives (viz., attraction to the
goal object) which ‘pull’ the animal toward the goal object;
the primary motivation is the expectancy of reward. With
drive-reduction theory, it is the termination of some condition
that motivates the organism (e.g., the reduction of hunger);
with incentive motivation theory, it is the elicitation of some
condition that motivates the organism (e.g., the anticipation of
eating when hungry). The following study illustrates these two
contrasting theories of motivation. Feeding can be produced by
electrical stimulation of the lateral hypothalamic area in
food-satiated animals. This stimulation-induced feeding probably
involves brain systems mediating the normal control of eating.
(See Wise 1974, for a discussion of stimulation-induced
feeding.) Because feeding begins immediately upon activation of
the electrical current and stops soon after its termination,
Mendelson (1966) was able to use electrical stimulation to
produce ‘hunger’ in selected parts of a T-maze. This
permitted an analysis of the "Role of Hunger in T-Maze
Learning for Food by Rats." The study’s objective was to
determine where in the T-maze the animal must be ‘hungry’ to
select the goal box containing food. The motivational condition
produced by the electrical stimulation (which is functionally
equivalent to natural hunger; Wise 1974) was elicited and
terminated in various parts of the experimental apparatus.
Mendelson (1966) first showed that food-satiated animals would
run to the compartment containing food when electrical
stimulation was constantly applied throughout the T-maze (i.e.,
in the start box, runway, choice point, and goal box).
Stimulation terminating upon the animal’s entry into the goal
box was not sufficient to maintain the behavior, but stimulation
activated only upon entry into the goal box containing food was
effective. The seemingly surprising aspect of this study (at
least for drive-reduction theorists) was that termination of
stimulation-induced ‘hunger’ did not maintain responding. In
fact, the motivational condition produced by the stimulation was
not even necessary at the choice point where the animal selected
the compartment containing the food; it only had to be present
in the goal box containing food. Mendelson’s (1966)
interpretation was consistent with current incentive
motivational theory: the experience of having eaten on previous
trials (reward) was both necessary and sufficient for this
instrumental response. (The demonstration of instrumental
responding for food in the absence of drive has been
independently replicated; Streather et al. 1982). Numerous
studies have shown similar effects, and attempts to demonstrate
behavior maintained by drive reduction (e.g., delivery of
intravenous water to water deprived rats; Corbit 1965) have been
largely unsuccessful.A detailed critique of motivational theory
is beyond the scope of this paper, but drive-reduction theory is
considered generally untenable by specialists in motivational
theory (see Bindra, 1969, 1974, 1978; Bolles 1972, 1967, 1975;
Toates 1981). There has been a shift to incentive motivational
explanations—particularly for appetitively motivated
behaviors—which provide a more adequate explanation of the
empirical data as well as a more satisfactory theoretical
integration (see Bindra 1969, 1974, 1978; Bolles 1972, 1967,
1975; Toates 1981). Drive-reduction theory probably best
explains conditions of aversive motivation (i.e., negative
reinforcement processes), where the animal is avoiding or
escaping an aversive stimulus (see Spence 1956, 1960). Incentive
motivational theory better explains conditions of appetitive
motivation (i.e., positive reinforcement processes), where the
animal is approaching some stimulus associated with reward. Drug
addiction appears to be governed primarily by an incentive
motivational process like the motivational properties of other
appetitive stimuli. Incentive motivational theory focuses on
associative conditioning like other learning theories, but the
expectancy of reward is the primary motivator. It is a cognitive
theory, where cognitive processes and anticipation figure
prominently. Some versions of incentive motivational theory also
provide a basis for understanding emotions (Bindra 1978), and a
similarity with traditional hedonic theories (e.g., Pfaffman,
1960; Young 1959, 1961, 1966) is apparent. Motivational
theorists have generally abandoned drive-reduction theory as a
universal principle governing most behavior. Unfortunately, many
other psychologists and physiologists are still preoccupied with
the notion of homeostatic regulation of needs. Homeostatic
regulation of various physiological processes (e.g., body
temperature, cardiac output) has provided an excellent model for
understanding many biological processes, but it has provided an
inadequate foundation for explaining most behaviors. The failure
of many scientists to abandon the notion of behavioral
homeostasis has obscured a better understanding of motivated
behavior.
A drive-like mechanism may influence drug-taking behavior in
some conditions. Drugs that produce physical dependence and that
when discontinued produce pronounced physical withdrawal
reactions accompanied by subjective feelings of distress may
have an additional mechanism for maintaining drug-taking
behavior. Because drug administration can relieve the withdrawal
distress associated with abstinence, the termination or
avoidance of withdrawal discomfort might also influence
drug-taking behavior. This negative reinforcement process would
have the characteristics described by drive-reduction theory.
Nonetheless, this potential negative reinforcement mechanism is
not necessary for drugs to be reinforcing nor is it an adequate
explanation for initiation or relapse to drug use. Indeed, the
ability of such a negative reinforcement process to maintain
drug-taking behavior has not been experimentally demonstrated.
Addiction can generally be considered an appetitively motivated
behavior, governed by the incentive properties of the drug and
related stimuli. The expectancy of reward (developed from
previous drug-taking experience) and the subsequent
pharmacological activation of brain reward pathways constitute a
sufficient explanation of the late acquisition and maintenance
phases of addiction. Other factors (e.g., intrapersonal,
sociological) probably have a primary role during the early
acquisition phase of addiction.
Addiction to Commonly Used Substances?
There are several widely used substances that are generally
considered socially acceptable—alcohol, caffeine, and
nicotine. Alcohol has well documented addictive properties,
although there is some debate over what constitutes alcoholism
and how much time is required to develop alcohol addiction. Of
the remaining two substances, nicotine has come under increasing
scrutiny as a potentially addictive substance. Indeed, several
organizations and some scientists have suggested that nicotine
is an extremely addictive drug (even the most addictive drug),
and there has been recent legislative attempts to regulate its
usage. Regulation of smoking is related to its reputed health
hazards, but the persistence of smoking behavior has generated
debate over the possible addictive properties of nicotine.
Nicotine use can produce an elevation in mood (e.g.,
Henningfield et al. 1985), and some studies suggest that
nicotine intake may be necessary for optimal functioning in
chronic smokers. Intravenous nicotine self-administration has
been demonstrated in humans (see Henningfield et al. 1987), and
smoking behavior appears to be largely influenced by the
nicotine content of the cigarettes (see Henningfield and
Goldberg 1988). A few animal studies have reported intravenous
nicotine self-administration, although difficulties have also
been reported in obtaining reliable self-administration (see
Balfour 1982; Dougherty et al. 1981; Henningfield and Goldberg
1983).
The argument suggesting that nicotine is an addictive substance
appears to be supported by the following observations which
reveal similarities with prototypical addictive drugs like
cocaine and heroin: (i) human subjective evaluations showing it
can elevate mood (e.g., Henningfield et al. 1985), (ii)
intravenous self-administration studies showing that it can
serve as a reinforcer in laboratory animals (see Henningfield
and Goldberg 1983), and (iii) neurochemical studies showing
apparent activation of the ventral tegmental reward system
(e.g., Andersson et al. 1981; Di Chiara and Imperato 1988). Each
line of evidence may seem sufficient to demonstrate that
nicotine is addictive, but they all suffer from one common
misconception. This misconception becomes obvious upon
considering the fundamental nature of drug addiction.
None of these methods assess the motivational strength of
nicotine administration. First, the subjective-effects measures
are probably best considered qualitative measures, determining
if various drugs have the ability to modify mood and affect in a
manner similar to addictive drugs. Other manipulations may
produce similar alterations in mood and affect, and these
measures by themselves do not establish the addiction liability
of a substance. Positive findings with these measures do
indicate a potential addiction liability, but they fail to
establish that the compound can control behavior to the degree
necessary to produce a true addiction. Second, animal
self-administration studies have shown that nicotine can serve
as a reinforcer under some experimental conditions, but none of
these studies have evaluated the strength of drug-taking
behavior. In fact, nicotine self-administration in laboratory
animals would appear much more difficult to establish than
self-administration of psychomotor stimulants or opiates (see
Griffiths et al. 1979b). This suggests that the reinforcing
effect of nicotine in laboratory animals may be much weaker than
that of prototypical addictive agents. (Even if strong
motivational effects were demonstrated for nicotine, the
difficulty in establishing nicotine self-administration suggests
that it has a relatively low [compared with cocaine or heroin]
addiction liability; see Bozarth 1989.) Third, activation of the
ventral tegmental reward system does not necessarily lead to
addiction, just as periodic activation of this system does not
invariably produce an addiction. Normal behavior may be
partially directed by the activity of this system (e.g.,
feeding, see Hamilton and Bozarth 1988; sexual behavior, see
Pfaus et al. 1989), and the usual expression of these behaviors
would not be described as constituting the degree of
compulsiveness necessary to fulfill the definition of addiction.
Drug addiction may require more than just simple activation of
this reward system and may even involve neuroadaptive changes in
this system (see Bozarth 1989; Dackis and Gold 1985; see also
the chapter by White, this volume).
The above discussion is not meant to argue that nicotine is a
nonaddictive drug. It is intended to refute the notion that
nicotine has an unequivocally established addiction potential of
equal magnitude to prototypical addictive agents; this is
clearly a hasty conclusion that exceeds the available data base.
Second, it serves to illustrate the principle that substances
can share many effects with highly addictive drugs and not
necessarily be addictive themselves. This latter point is most
important in conceptualizing the very nature of addiction and in
understanding the interaction of addictive substances with brain
mechanisms subserving motivation and reward processes. With the
perspective advocated by this chapter, drug addiction is viewed
as an extension of normal behavioral processes, and the
addiction potential of a drug is derived from its ability to
activate brain mechanisms involved in the control of normal
behavior. Drug addiction represents a case of extreme control
exerted by a pharmacological substance that can disrupt the
individual’s motivational hierarchy. "Psychological"
vs. "Physiological" Processes
One point regarding the psychological and the physiological
natures of behavior deserves special mention. Obviously,
psychological events have some basis in brain physiology, but a
strictly reductionistic approach to behavior frequently ignores
important cognitive processes. Physiological processes
affect/produce cognitive events and cognitive events
affect/produce physiological processes. What is considered
"psychological" and what is considered
"physiological" in nature is largely determined by
one’s perspective .Drugs can affect psychological events and
this may be reflected as changes in desires and motivation. The
initial rewarding effects of many drugs are probably experienced
subjectively as an elevation in mood and affect (see Haertzen
and Hickey 1987; Henningfield et al. 1987; McAuliffe and Gordon
1974). The subjective state produced by the drug, however, is
clearly distinct from the ‘normal’ psychological feelings of
‘self.’ Repeated experience with an addictive drug may
produce a breakdown in this distinction. Conditioning processes
may elicit cognitions about the drug and its appetitive effects.
These "psychological" events may be accompanied by the
subjective experiences of desire and craving. As the addiction
develops fully, changes in the individual’s motivational
hierarchy ensue; the drug whose effect was sought only
occasionally and whose intake was limited by intrapersonal and
sociological factors begins to dominate the individual’s
behavior. Other formerly potent motivators (e.g., food, sex,
safety) lose their abilities to influence the individual’s
behavior, and motivational toxicity usually becomes apparent.
This progression from casual drug use to addiction results from
the interaction of the drug with brain reward systems and from
cognitive processes related to anticipation of the drug’s
rewarding effects. Desire and craving can be elicited by
physiological events. Through this process a drug’s
pharmacological action can alter feelings of the ‘self’ and
enter the realm experientially labeled ‘the mind.’ A desire
for the drug can develop from repeatedly experiencing its
rewarding effects; this desire is phenomenologically within the
‘self’ and not distinguishable as externally controlled
behavior any more than feelings of hunger or thirst are
considered under the control of external factors. What may not
be immediately apparent is that cognitions and social
interactions can also affect ‘physiological’ processes.
Associative processes (e.g., exposure to stimuli related to drug
taking) may elicit subtle activation of brain reward mechanisms.
This, in turn, may produce a priming effect eliciting
motivational arousal and intensifying the incentive value of the
stimulus conditions associated with the drug. (An animal model
of this phenomenon may be the conditioned place preference
paradigm where animals approach environmental cues previously
associated with drug reward; see Bozarth 1987f, White et al.
1987.) The subjective experience of craving may accompany this
subtle activation of reward processes, and cognitive processes
may further exacerbate physiological activation and craving.
Cognitive techniques that disrupt this cycle may abate craving
and diminish its subsequent effect on behavior (e.g., relapse to
drug taking). A Simple Psychobiological Schema
Social, personality, and cognitive factors are very important in
instigating and maintaining drug usage during the acquisition
phase of addiction. Obviously, the pharmacological effects of a
drug—no matter how powerful—cannot provide the impetus for
initial drug use. It is likely that early drug use is largely
governed by nonpharmacological factors, although the biological
consequences of drug administration will quickly have some
influence on subsequent drug usage. At some point during
repeated drug use (very quickly for some compounds), the
pharmacological actions of the drug usually predominate and the
other factors influencing drug intake have less significance.
The extreme case of drug use (i.e., addiction) is primarily
under control of the pharmacological effects on brain motivation
and reward mechanisms, and it is this phase of drug usage that
has been the focus of this chapter. A simple psychobiological
schema for conceptualizing the etiology of drug addiction is
illustrated in Figure 3. It depicts three domains that govern
addiction—intrapersonal, sociological, and pharmacological.
During the acquisition phase, personality and environmental
factors can play important roles in drug use. These are
primarily within the intrapersonal and sociological domains,
respectively, while circumstantial factors that can influence
drug use fall within either domain. As drug usage intensifies,
it becomes progressively under control of factors in the
pharmacological domain. With this schema, addiction is seen
mainly as a pharmacological process involving the interaction of
the drug with brain mechanisms mediating motivation and reward.
Other factors important in the genesis of drug addiction,
however, include intrapersonal and sociological events, and they
are acknowledged by the schema illustrated by the figure. The
most obvious way that intrapersonal and sociological factors can
affect the development of addiction is by influencing the degree
of continued drug exposure. Intrapersonal and sociological
factors may facilitate drug-taking behavior (e.g., rebellious
tendencies and peer-pressure, respectively) or they may inhibit
repeated drug use (e.g., fear of adverse medical consequences
and legal/social sanctions, respectively), especially early
during the acquisition phase. These factors do not directly
affect the pharmacological reward produced by drug
administration but merely modulate the continued exposure to the
addictive drug. Another way that intrapersonal/sociological
factors may influence drug-taking behavior during the
acquisition phase is by affecting the rewarding action of the
drug. For the first few weeks of testing, individually housed
animals intravenously self-administer more heroin than socially
housed animals; this effect seems to be limited to influencing
the rate of acquisition because both groups of subjects learn to
reliably self-administer heroin (Bozarth et al. 1989; cf.
Alexander 1984). However, it does demonstrate that a social
manipulation (isolation distress?) can influence the
pharmacological reward produced by a drug.
The psychobiological approach to studying drug addiction
emphasizes the importance of neural mechanisms that govern
normal behavior. Addiction is not viewed as a unique condition
nor does it differ significantly from other forms of compulsive
behavior. Rather, it involves conventional motivational
processes and is distinguished only by its extremely potent
control of behavior. The rewarding drug effects involve
primarily an appetitive motivational process best described by
incentive motivational theory. Cognitive expectancies figure
prominently in the individual’s behavior, and intrapersonal
and social factors can significantly influence drug taking.
Addiction, however, is most directly related to the drug’s
pharmacological properties.
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